Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7080, USA.
Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2012 May;18(5):869-76. doi: 10.1002/ibd.21806. Epub 2011 Jul 7.
Growing evidence demonstrates the adverse effects of narcotics in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). We sought to study the relationship between narcotic use, objective measures of disease activity, and other associated factors in hospitalized patients with IBD.
We performed a retrospective cohort study of all adult IBD patients admitted to a general medical or surgical ward service at a United States tertiary care center over a 1-year period. We collected demographic and disease-specific information, inpatient narcotic use, and disease activity measurements from endoscopic and radiologic reports. Bivariate comparisons were made between characteristics and narcotic use. Logistic regression was used to evaluate the independent effects of characteristics on narcotic use.
A total of 117 IBD patients were included. Narcotics were given to 70.1% of hospitalized patients. Factors significantly associated with any inpatient narcotic use: Crohn's disease (CD); P ≤ 0.01, duration of IBD, P = 0.02, prior psychiatric diagnosis, P = 0.02, outpatient narcotic use, P ≤ 0.01, current smoking, P ≤ 0.01, prior IBD-specific surgery, P < 0.02, and prior IBD / irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) diagnosis, P = 0.02. Narcotic use was not significantly associated with disease severity on computed tomography (CT) scan or endoscopy. On multivariate analysis, smoking (odds ratio [OR] 4.34, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.21-15.6) and prior outpatient narcotic use (OR 5.41, 95% CI 1.54-19.0) were independently associated with inpatient narcotic use.
A majority of patients with IBD are prescribed narcotics during hospitalization in spite of data on increased complications. Risk factors for narcotic use include CD and associated factors (disease duration, surgeries), substance abuse (outpatient narcotics and smoking), psychiatric diagnoses, and IBD-IBS.
越来越多的证据表明麻醉剂在炎症性肠病(IBD)中存在不良影响。我们旨在研究住院 IBD 患者中麻醉剂使用与疾病活动的客观指标及其他相关因素之间的关系。
我们对在美国一家三级护理中心的普通内科或外科病房住院的所有成年 IBD 患者进行了回顾性队列研究。我们从内镜和放射学报告中收集了人口统计学和疾病特异性信息、住院期间使用的麻醉剂以及疾病活动测量值。对特征和麻醉剂使用之间的关系进行了双变量比较。使用逻辑回归评估特征对麻醉剂使用的独立影响。
共纳入 117 例 IBD 患者。70.1%的住院患者使用了麻醉剂。与任何住院患者使用麻醉剂显著相关的因素包括:克罗恩病(CD)(P≤0.01)、IBD 病程(P=0.02)、既往精神科诊断(P=0.02)、门诊麻醉剂使用(P≤0.01)、当前吸烟(P≤0.01)、既往 IBD 特定手术(P<0.02)以及既往 IBD/肠易激综合征(IBS)诊断(P=0.02)。麻醉剂使用与 CT 扫描或内镜下的疾病严重程度无显著相关性。在多变量分析中,吸烟(比值比[OR]4.34,95%置信区间[CI]1.21-15.6)和既往门诊麻醉剂使用(OR 5.41,95% CI 1.54-19.0)与住院患者使用麻醉剂独立相关。
尽管存在增加并发症的数据,但大多数 IBD 患者在住院期间仍会被开具麻醉剂。麻醉剂使用的危险因素包括 CD 及其相关因素(疾病病程、手术)、药物滥用(门诊麻醉剂和吸烟)、精神科诊断和 IBD-IBS。